Current:Home > MarketsUS applications for jobless benefits fall as labor market continues to show resilience -Aspire Money Growth
US applications for jobless benefits fall as labor market continues to show resilience
View
Date:2025-04-19 08:16:01
Fewer Americans filed for jobless claims last week as the labor market continues to show resilience in the face of elevated interest rates intended to cool economic growth in the U.S.
Applications for unemployment benefits fell by 8,000 to 212,000 for the week ending Feb. 10, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
The four-week average of claims, which quiets some of the week-to-week noise, rose by 5,750 to 218,500, up from 212,750 the previous week.
Weekly unemployment claims are seen as a proxy for the number of U.S. layoffs in a given week. They have remained at extraordinarily low levels despite efforts by the U.S. Federal Reserve to cool the economy.
The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark rate 11 times beginning in March of 2022 in an effort to bring down the four-decade high inflation that took hold after the economy roared back from the COVID-19 recession of 2020.
Though inflation has eased considerably in the past year, the Labor Department reported earlier this week that consumer prices remain well above the Fed’s 2% target.
The Fed has left rates unchanged at its last four meetings.
As the Fed rapidly jacked up rates in 2022, most analysts predicted that the U.S. economy was bound for a recession. But the economy and the job market remained surprisingly resilient.
U.S. employers delivered a stunning burst of hiring to begin 2024, adding 353,000 jobs in January in the latest sign of the economy’s continuing ability to shrug off the highest interest rates in two decades.
Last month’s job gain — roughly twice what economists had predicted — topped the December gain of 333,000, a figure that was revised sharply higher. The unemployment rate stayed at 3.7%, and has been below 4% for 24 straight months — two full years — the longest such streak since the 1960s.
Though layoffs remain at low levels, there has been an uptick in job cuts recently across technology and media. Google parent company Alphabet, eBay, TikTok, Snap and the Los Angeles Times have all recently announced layoffs. On Wednesday, Cisco Systems announced it was cutting 4,000 jobs.
Outside of tech and media, UPS, Macy’s and Levi’s also recently cut jobs.
In total, 1.9 million Americans were collecting jobless benefits during the week that ended Feb. 3, an increase of 30,000 from the previous week and the most since November.
veryGood! (3999)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- 'Transformers: Rise of the Beasts' has got your fightin' robots right here
- The Academy of American Poets names its first Latino head
- Pain and pleasure do the tango in the engrossing new novel 'Kairos'
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- He once had motor skill challenges. Now he's the world's fastest Rubik's cube solver
- Jane Fonda's Parenting Regret Is Heartbreakingly Relatable
- In 'You Hurt My Feelings,' the stakes are low but deeply relatable
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- James Marsden on little white lies and being the other guy
Ranking
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- The final season of the hit BBC crime series 'Happy Valley' has come to the U.S.
- Relationships are the true heart of 1940s dystopian novel 'Kallocain'
- These were the most frequently performed plays and musicals in high schools this year
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- 25th Anniversary Spectacular, Part III!
- Dear 'Succession' fans, we need to talk about Shiv Roy in that series finale
- HBO's 'The Idol' offers stylish yet oddly inert debut episode
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Bipartisan group of senators unveil bill targeting TikTok, other foreign tech companies
Indonesia fuel depot fire kills 18; more than a dozen missing
'All the Sinners Bleed' elegantly walks a fine line between horror and crime fiction
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
In 'Exclusion,' Kenneth Lin draws on his roots as the son of Chinese immigrants
'Past Lives' is a story about love and choices
Françoise Gilot, the famed artist who loved and then left Picasso, is dead at 101